Transcript Slide 1

Graduate Internships and
Employability: a Case Study from
the NE of England
Dr Ruth Helyer
Graduate employment
• Global recession has created a highly competitive jobs market
• Increasing numbers of HE graduates
(almost 20% of whom are failing to gain employment; many others underemployed – as many as 47% - ONS 2013).
HE participation in UK increased from 12% in 1979 – 49% in 2012
(Parliament Briefing Papers, 2013).
• Youth unemployment – 1 million under 24 in UK – predicted that
12.8% worldwide by 2018 (ONS 2013). Local Tees Valley almost double national
• Changing workplaces – ageing workforce - by 2020 1/3 UK workforce
over 50 (Houses of Parliament 2011); technology; new jobs and sectors
What is UK HE doing to address this?
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Internships – during vacations or after graduation
Embedded employability modules
Bolt-on employability modules
Facilitated work experience
Work-based projects
Work-placements within study time
Sandwich programmes
Work-based studies programmes
– Are these compulsory? Assessed?
What do we mean by employability skills?
• Job seeking skills?
• Interview and CV enhancement techniques?
• Broad non-specific (transferable?) attributes?
Adaptability
Resilience
Problem- solving skills
Analytical skills
• Generic v specific? – employers want both
‘We don’t just look for degree subject content, we want enterprise and flair,
confidence, common sense and drive’ Intern host
Graduate Internship Programme
• 87 interns in 2013 (almost double the previous year)- from all
academic schools apart from health – most from
arts/media/design (38 which is 50% more than any other school)
(2014 - 122)
• Offers previous year’s graduates work experience, to
improve their employment prospects – top graduate
recruiters expect this – with as many as 37% of top graduate
jobs being offered to graduates already known to the
company (High Flyers 2014).
What is involved?
• Real-life work experience with local company
– 12 week paid placement – January - March (uni pays)
• Structured personal/professional
development programme
– Run by university – on campus
– Team building at forest retreat
Other Benefits?
• Enhances University/business relationships:
– previously unknown companies have sent cohorts of students to the uni;
practitioners from the companies have run master classes; new collaborative
programmes have been written; KTPs embarked on; as well as supporting the
Graduate Intern Programme – by offering placements each year but also
offering to become involved in recruitment process and development sessions
• Improves the Destination of Leavers of Higher Education
(DLHE) – Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA)
– Publicly published graduate employment data – aligned to each HEI – asks
graduates 6 months after graduation about employment/further study status
The Process
• Employers submit an outline project brief – this
summarises the intern’s role in the workplace
• Graduates apply and are interviewed
• 109 employers applied – from:
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Manufacturing
Engineering
Information Communication & Technology
The arts, entertainment and recreation
• 59% did not specify a degree subject
What skills do employers really want?
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Very few wanted an intern from their specific
sector
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A large majority valuing HLS such as
leadership & management; project
management; digital media; IT, as
much as sector specific skills
I was really impressed with his ability to
just fit in and get on with things.
The tasks ranged from mundane to high level
and nothing phased him. I found him very
adaptable and capable
We can teach them the
technical skills – we need
them to come as graduates
with creativity, versatility,
ideas and ambition
She was more organised and professional
than the full-time staff
And what did the interns think?
It was more than I expected, I got to manage my own project and
helped to develop some long-term strategies. I felt like I got a lot
out of the experience (TU intern, R11).
I thought I would be doing some customer service and basic admin work
but I was actually given an interesting variety of tasks, some of which
really tested and developed my abilities (TU intern, R31).
I did a bit of everything, it was more than I expected but I was happy to
do more (TU intern, R4).
And although employers value generic skills…
What I did in the workplace really built on my
degree (TU intern, R38).
Being in the company really integrated my
academic studies into real life work—I loved it!
(TU intern, R52).
Evaluation
– Desk research
– mid-term and end survey to all employers
– Evaluation day with graduates – including
questionnaire
– Full interviews with selection of employers and
graduates
– Graduate readiness survey – beginning (part of
induction) and end of programme
A. I feel confident about my ability to
compete in the graduate labour
market.
B. I am confident that I would perform
well in an interview.
C. I understand what qualities
employers expect from graduates.
D. I know how to write applications that
will be successful.
E. I know where to look for the jobs that
would suit me.
F. I know what is expected of me in a
graduate role.
G. I feel confident about my future.
H. I am confident I will be able to
deliver what is asked of me in a
graduate job.
I. I know what I would like my career to
be.
J. I know how to ‘sell’ my strengths,
skills and experience to employers.
K. I know what I need to do to be
successful.
L. I am aware of my own strengths and
weaknesses.
M. I know how and where to find out
information about graduate
employers.
N. I am able to reflect on and appraise
my own performance.
Progression
Numbers
Employment
23
Graduates for Business scheme (TU)
18
Unemployed
15
Internship extension
8
Temporary employment
6
Other
4
Volunteering
3
Left early
2
Applying for further study
2
Self employed
2
Total
87
Employer
This is the first Teesside Graduate I have employed and I am very
impressed. If all Teesside graduates are like this I would like to
employ more (TU internship programme—host organisation).
bright, capable, enthusiastic, good at interaction and
emotionally intelligent.
Learning points
• Employers are looking for rounded employees
• Students benefit from time spent in the real
workplace
• There are some communication issues around
terminology
• Development opportunities may need to be optional
• Connections must be made between HE learning and
‘work’
• Employers want to be involved
2013/14 cohort
• 122 interns
• 79 employers (131 employers put forward 194 project ideas)
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58 of the 194 did not specify a particular degree
44 asked for marketing
28 asked for a business related degree
18 specified a humanities/social sciences degree.
• Breakdown by academic school is very similar
• Sectors covered is very similar
Helyer, R., and Lee, D. (2012) The 21st Century Multiple Generation Workforce: Overlaps and Differences
but also Challenges and Benefits. Education + Training, 54 (7), pp. 545-578.
Helyer, R., and Lee, D. (2014) The Role of Work Experience in the Future Employability of Higher
Education Graduates. Higher Education Quarterly, 68 (3), pp. 348 – 372.
High Fliers (2014). The Graduate Market in 2014 - Annual review of graduate vacancies & starting
salaries at Britain's leading employers. http://www.highfliers.co.uk/download/GMReport14.pdf
Houses of Parliament, Parliamentary Office for Science & Technology. (2011). ‘An Ageing Workforce’.
Postnote no. 391, October 2011. www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/post-pn-391.pdf
Office for National Statistics (ONS). (2013). Graduates in the labour market 2013.
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/lmac/graduates-in-the-labour-market/2013/rpt---graduates-in-the-uklabour-market-2013.html
Parliament briefing papers (2013). Participation in Higher Education. Parliament Briefing Papers.
http://www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/sn02630.pdf
Editor
Dr Ruth Helyer
Teesside University, UK
[email protected]
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Dr. Ruth Helyer
Head of Workforce Development (Research & Policy)
National Teaching Fellow
Teesside University, UK
[email protected]